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Old Thu Apr 11, 2013, 11:59am
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Originally Posted by ballgame99 View Post
Wow, how does the C not have a foul there? The foul and OOB violations occur almost simultaineously. I would have thought it would have been worthy of a meeting of the two officials. In the end, the guy went OOB on his own and the foul on the LVille player had nothing to do with that. That had the potential to be a sticky call though.
Because the C, having a patient whistle, knew that contact had no effect on the play....no possession consequence. The player who rebounded the ball was heading OOB and waiting to let him do so was the right thing.
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Old Thu Apr 11, 2013, 01:04pm
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Originally Posted by Camron Rust View Post
Because the C, having a patient whistle, knew that contact had no effect on the play....no possession consequence. The player who rebounded the ball was heading OOB and waiting to let him do so was the right thing.
I think you are giving him a lot of credit. That's the same guy that called the "block" on Burke and guessed on the foul on Burke on the corner 3. Suggesting that he was somehow simultaneously aware of the trajectory of a rebounder that was blocked from his view due to all of the significant contact occuring right in front of him may be a stretch.
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Old Thu Apr 11, 2013, 01:24pm
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Originally Posted by ballgame99 View Post
I think you are giving him a lot of credit. That's the same guy that called the "block" on Burke and guessed on the foul on Burke on the corner 3. Suggesting that he was somehow simultaneously aware of the trajectory of a rebounder that was blocked from his view due to all of the significant contact occuring right in front of him may be a stretch.
"That guy" made a bad call on the Burke block. But "that guy" has worked multiple Final Fours and Championship games. One bad call doesn't invalidate his ability to judge other plays.
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Old Thu Apr 11, 2013, 01:39pm
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Originally Posted by BadNewsRef View Post
"That guy" made a bad call on the Burke block. But "that guy" has worked multiple Final Fours and Championship games. One bad call doesn't invalidate his ability to judge other plays.
Yep. We have all missed a call during a game. Yes it was not a great call, but that does not mean the next 3 or 4 he did not totally get right.

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Old Thu Apr 11, 2013, 01:40pm
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Originally Posted by ballgame99 View Post
I think you are giving him a lot of credit. That's the same guy that called the "block" on Burke and guessed on the foul on Burke on the corner 3. Suggesting that he was somehow simultaneously aware of the trajectory of a rebounder that was blocked from his view due to all of the significant contact occuring right in front of him may be a stretch.
The block call was a bad call. The call on the 3 by Hancock was not a bad call. You just didn't like it for some reason. As far as this call, the contact by the flying Louisville player happened after the Michigan player landed oob. That's not gonna get a whistle. And if it had, the L would have told the C that the oob happened first. Really not sure why anyone would have a problem with this play.
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Old Thu Apr 11, 2013, 07:33pm
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Originally Posted by ballgame99 View Post
I think you are giving him a lot of credit. That's the same guy that called the "block" on Burke and guessed on the foul on Burke on the corner 3. Suggesting that he was somehow simultaneously aware of the trajectory of a rebounder that was blocked from his view due to all of the significant contact occuring right in front of him may be a stretch.
Yeah, why would you give any credit or benefit of the doubt to this official. I mean anybody can work multiple Final 4s and Championship games......

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